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BRAZIL: A Law to Combat
Biopiracy
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RIO DE JANEIRO - The Brazilian
government wants a law for fighting biopiracy. A bill
on this issue, drafted by the Environment Ministry,
will be sent to parliament this year, and will define
the crimes against Brazil's national genetic wealth
and establish sentences.
Currently, the country fights smuggling of plant and
animal species using the Environmental Crimes Act,
which has proved ineffective because of its ''soft''
penalties, mostly fines.
Specific legislation is needed in Brazil, ''a mega-diverse
country with around 22 percent of the world's species,''
and thus an ongoing target of biopiracy, says Environment
Minister Marina Silva.
The bill aims to regulate access to the country's
genetic resources based on the principles of the Convention
on Biological Diversity, approved by the 1992 Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro, and ratified by 168 countries.
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CHILE: Digital Map of
Environmental Damage
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SANTIAGO - The Chilean National
Ecological Action Network, RENACE, presented the first
digital version of its ''Map of Ecological Destruction
in Chile'', an annual report that highlights the environmental
trouble spots in each region of the country and the
disputes with greatest public impact.
The map, found online at http://www.renace.cl, and
is based on official data from public and private
sources, updated this year and with references to
Internet sources, RENACE leaders announced last week.
The data covers river contamination, garbage dumps,
pesticide use, soil degradation, forest plantations
and marine resources. There are also tables categorizing
plants and animals that are endangered, vulnerable
or rare.
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VENEZUELA: Center to Help
Beached Whales
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CARACAS - The Venezuelan Environment
Ministry is pushing for the creation of a special
center to deal with cetaceans -- whale and dolphin
species -- that end up beached on the country's coast.
There have been 40 such cases in the past three years.
Venezuelan waters are home to some 30 of the 80 existing
whale and dolphin species.
''The most frequent is beachings of common dolphins
(Delphinus delphis) and bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops
truncatus), which are not endangered, but are under
special protection,'' Eddys Solórzano, the ministry's
biodiversity expert, told Tierramérica.
The dolphins can measure up to four meters long and
weigh as much as 300 kg. Most beachings are the result
of an illness in the mammal, or accidents related
to fishing or collisions with boats.
The new assistance center to help the beached whales
and dolphins will be in the central coastal state
of Vargas.
The beachings tend to occur most on Margarita Island
and the coastlines of Sucre, Falcón and Vargas, said
ministry biologist Clemente Balladares.
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GUATEMALA: Summit Against
Drought
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GUATEMALA CITY - Some 200 officials
and experts will gather in the Guatemalan capital
in November to study the problems of drought and desertification
afflicting Latin America and attempt to come up with
some solutions, announced this Central American country's
Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources.
The meeting is part of the 10th Latin American and
Caribbean Convention to Combat Desertification and
Drought, Jorge Luis Galindo, the ministry's director
of environmental policy and strategy, told Tierramérica.
The participants will study ''possible joint actions
to confront the problem of drought and in some cases
the advance of the desert that affect the countries
in the region, as well as analyzing ways to obtain
international aid,'' he said.
According to United Nations figures, more than 30
percent of the Earth's land surface is threatened
by or vulnerable to desertification, affecting more
than 150 countries.
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HONDURAS: Protecting Sea
Turtles
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TEGUCIGALPA - Authorities from
the Honduran Ministry of Natural Resources set up
a ban a month ago to protect the sea turtle species
that nest around the Gulf of Fonseca, a maritime area
shared by Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
Marcio Castellón, of the ministry's fishing and aquaculture
division, told Tierramérica that the ban on the sales
and commercialization of the turtles and their eggs
would last three months, the time needed for the turtles
lay their eggs on the Gulf's beaches, and the baby
turtles to hatch and reach the sea.
Already, 72 nests have been protected, for a total
of 6,400 sea turtles, which will be released from
mid-October through November, he said.
Four sea turtle species -- all endangered -- can be
found in the Gulf of Fonseca: leatherback (Dermochelys
coriacea), hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), olive
Ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea) and the green (Chelonia
mydas) sea turtles.
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CUBA: New Trees for Havana
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HAVANA - ''My Green Plan'' has
slated for this year the planting of 2.5 million trees
of 52 species in the Cuban capital, part of ongoing
efforts to re-establish vegetation in this city of
2.3 million people.
The project involves several state agencies, schools
and health centers, and also any resident who wants
to help plant trees in the playgrounds or recreational
parks near their homes.
Experts consulted by Tierramérica said that 75 percent
of the trees in central Havana need to be replaced
because they are older and now pose a danger because
they could fall.
Hurricane Charley, which passed through Cuba in August,
uprooted or damaged more than 37,000 trees in the
capital, most of which were diseased, hollowed and
old, and needed to be replaced anyway.
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